Certainly! Here is a **500-word English rewrite** of the story above, capturing the essence and emotion of David Ruffin’s perspective on the five Motown “pretenders”:

David Ruffin’s Hidden Grudge: The Five Motown “Pretenders”

David Ruffin: “These 5 Motown Stars Were Just Pretenders - YouTube

David Ruffin was never just another voice in Motown—he was the soul-baring, pain-soaked heart of The Temptations. But as his star faded, he watched with a mix of sorrow and disdain as others, in his eyes, simply played the parts Motown gave them. For Ruffin, five Motown icons were not true artists, but “pretenders”—polished, marketable, and safe, but lacking the raw truth he lived for.

First was **Dennis Edwards**, his own replacement in The Temptations. Dennis sang every note perfectly, just as Motown taught, but to Ruffin, perfection was empty if it didn’t hurt. Dennis was the “placeholder”—never the soul. Ruffin poured his life and pain into every word, while Dennis, he believed, only followed instructions. The audience applauded, but Ruffin saw only a shadow of what once was.

Eddie Kendricks**, once a brother on stage, became another symbol of Motown’s shift. Eddie’s silky falsetto brought comfort, not confrontation. He was loved for his grace and beauty, but Ruffin felt his own scars and struggles were what made music real. When Eddie sang, it was as if hardship had never touched him. Their friendship faded into a silent, unbridgeable distance—one man a storm, the other a gentle breeze.

Then came **Diana Ross**. Ruffin couldn’t accept how she was elevated above The Supremes, turned into a solo star by Motown’s marketing machine. He saw her as the face of a new, sanitized Motown—elegant, controlled, and designed to please white America. While Ruffin had to fight for every scrap of recognition, Diana was handed the spotlight. He called her smart, but hollow—famous not for her soul, but for fitting the image Motown wanted to sell.

You'll NEVER Believe What REALLY Happened To David Ruffin.. - YouTube

Smokey Robinson** was another source of quiet resentment. Smokey, a legend in his own right, was the “keeper of the strings”—the one who polished artists until they shined, but in Ruffin’s eyes, also the one who smoothed away all the rough, real edges. Smokey wanted order, harmony, and beauty. Ruffin wanted music to bleed, to sweat, to ache. The tension between them was never open conflict, but a constant, suffocating pressure.

Finally, there was **Marvin Gaye**. Ruffin saw Marvin’s rise as the final insult—Motown’s new icon of authenticity, even as Ruffin felt he had lived the pain Marvin only performed. Marvin was handsome, composed, and knew how to rebel just enough. To Ruffin, it was all a show. He believed Marvin’s music was carefully crafted for comfort, not born from true suffering. The world chose Marvin’s polished anguish over Ruffin’s raw wounds.

David Ruffin: “These 5 Motown Stars Were Just Pretenders - YouTube

Ruffin’s bitterness was not pure jealousy—it was heartbreak. He saw himself as the last of a dying breed: an artist who sang because he had no other way to survive. The “pretenders” were simply those who fit into Motown’s perfect machine, while he was cast aside for being too real, too much. In the end, his grudge was a wound left by an industry that wanted stars, not souls.